Australians ahead of rest: Inzamam
Pakistan vice-captain Inzamam-ul-Haq Sunday admitted that Australia were heads and shoulders above the rest but contested that battle for the second placed team was still wide open
Samiul Hasan
31-Dec-2001
Pakistan vice-captain Inzamam-ul-Haq Sunday admitted that
Australia were heads and shoulders above the rest but
contested that battle for the second placed team was still
wide open.
"If you believe in ratings, then South Africa are the second
best and Pakistan placed eighth. But if you analyse the
overall strengths of rest of the teams, then South Africa
and Pakistan are neck-and-neck.
"It would not be an over-statement if I say that we are a
neck ahead. Ratings at times can be misleading, as in this
particular case," Inzamam, who turns 32 on March 3, and a
veteran of 75 Tests and 251 One-day Internationals, said.
Australia strengthened their position on top of the ladder
after thrashing South Africa by nine wickets inside four
days at Melbourne to take an impregnable 2-0 lead in the
three-Test series.
"Australia have set very high standards which I believe is
good for world cricket. Rest of the teams are now targeting
to emulate Australia which has lifted the overall standard
of the game," he said.
The burly batsman said the confirmation of who was the
second best team after Australia was unlikely to be decided
before the end of next year.
"Our next year's series in South Africa will determine who
deserves to be rated second best. The series is too far away
and a lot of cricket has to be played until then. But I
believe that series will be the battle for second place," he
said.
Pakistan will play three Tests in South Africa in November-
December 2002, immediately after hosting Australia for a
three-Test series. When Pakistan last toured South Africa,
they won the Durban Test but lost at Port Elizabeth.
On the contrary, South Africa won at Faisalabad in 1997-98
to win the series 1-0.
"The only thing that separates Pakistan from South Africa is
consistency. We are striving hard to achieve that. But I
must say here that we have an excellent record outside
Pakistan.
"The only place where we have struggled is in our own
backyard," country's most consistent batsman said.
Pakistan have lost all their previous four home series but
drew the Test series in South Africa, beat India in India in
1999 (2-1 if Asian Test Championship game is included),
defeated Sri Lanka 2-0 in 2000 before drawing series in New
Zealand and England this year.
"We could have won the Test series in the West Indies but
everyone know why we lost. Same was the story in Australia
in 1999 when umpiring error cost us the Hobart Test. We
would have been a different team in the final Test at Perth
had Hobart game gone our way," he said.
Justin Langer was given not out by the home country umpire
early on the fifth morning after Pakistan were defending 360
odd runs. Langer and Adam Gilchrist slammed centuries to
steer Australia to a four-wicket victory.
"The way South Africa capitulated is not a surprise to me
because, with all due respect to them, they don't have the
bowling to dismiss a team like Australia twice in a match to
win the Test. Allan Donald is playing after a long layoff
and it would be asking for too much from Shaun Pollock to
pick bulk of the wickets.
"At least, we gave Australia run for their money in 1999 and
it was mainly due to our overall composition and balance of
the team," Inzamam, who has scored 5,299-Test and 8,196 oneday runs, said. Inzamam opined that Pakistan had a complete
and properly balanced team.
"We have good, aggressive batters and a battery of matchwinning bowlers in Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis, Shoaib Akhtar,
Mohammad Sami, Saqlain Mushtaq and Danish Kaneria.
"With such a balanced attack, we have the credentials to
restrict any opponents to a low score even if the batters
fail to put up a decent score. It should not be forgotten
that batsmen win one-day matches while bowlers win Tests for
their teams."
Inzamam may have the highest regards for his bowlers. But
fact of the matter is Wasim has struggled for wickets,
Shoaib and Sami have spent more time outside the field,
Saqlain has not been as devastating and Danish is a novice
to international cricket.
"You can't have everything going your way. But who would
deny that these are marvellous bowlers and still not many
batsmen in the world would like to face them.
"Besides in Abdur Razzaq, we have a world-class all-rounder.
Modern day cricket has proved that each team needs to have a
player like Razzaq to give proper balance to the side," he
said.
Inzamam said his team's main objective in the coming year
would be to improve consistency. "We would like to win
everything that we contest for.
"World Cup is definitely on top of the list but it is Test
cricket in which we would like to improve. Teams are rated,
ranked and followed on their performance in Test arena
rather that in one-day cricket because the followers of the
game are knowledgeable enough to judge that in one-day
cricket the team that does well on that particular day wins,
irrespective of the conditions and opponents, "he concluded.